Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 189South Africa
Road Accident Fund v Legal Practice Council and Others (134420/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 189 (21 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
21 February 2025
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAGPPHC 189
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Road Accident Fund v Legal Practice Council and Others (134420/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 189 (21 February 2025)
Road Accident Fund v Legal Practice Council and Others (134420/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 189 (21 February 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2025_189.html
sino date 21 February 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case No: 134420/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED: YES.
21 February 2025
In
the matter between:
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
Applicant
and
THE LEGAL PRACTICE
COUNCIL
1
st
Respondent
THE
BOARD OF SHERIFFS
2
nd
Respondent
THE
SHERIFF, PRETORIA CENTRAL
3
rd
Respondent
THE
SHERIFF, PRETORIA EAST
4
th
Respondent
THE
SHERIFF, CENTURION EAST
5
th
Respondent
THE
SHERIFF, JOHANNESBURG CENTRAL
6
th
Respondent
THE
SHERIFF, CAPE TOWN
7
th
Respondent
THE
SHERIFF, EAST LONDON
8
th
Respondent
THE
SHERIFF, DURBAN CENTRAL
9
th
Respondent
THE
PRETORIA ASSOCIATION OF ATTORNEYS
10
th
Respondent
THE
JOHANNESBURG ATTORNEYS ASSOCIATION
11
th
Respondent
MOKODOU
ERASMUS DAVIDSON INCORPORATED
12
th
Respondent
VAN
DYK STEENKAMP ATTORNEYS INCORPORATED
13
th
Respondent
MAFORI
LESUFI
INCORPORATED
14
th
Respondent
ALFRED
LYTON AND 186 OTHERS
15
th
to 201
st
Respondent
NOLWANDO
DUNGA AND 5 OTHERS
202
nd
to 207
th
Respondent
YOLISWA
ALICIA MTHI
208
th
Respondent
PRINCESS
QIKANI
209
th
Respondent
DVDM
ATTORNEYS INCORPORATED
210
th
Respondent
PROFESSIONALS
UNITY OF SOUTH AFRICA
211
th
Respondent
BRITS
& BEUKES INCORPORATED
212
th
Respondent
JJ
MNGUNI
213
th
Respondent
SCHUMANN
VAN DEN HEEVER AND SLABBERT INC.
214
th
Respondent
BLACK
LAWYERS ASSOCIATION
215
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
SK HASSIM J
Introduction
[1]
The Road Accident Fund (“
the Fund”)
has been the
beneficiary of a moratorium on the execution of writs of execution
and warrants of attachment since November 2020,
save for the period
between September 2021 to August 2022. In this application,
launched on 21 December 2023, the Fund seeks
the suspension of writs
of execution and warrants of attachment (referred to hereinafter as
writs and warrants
, respectively). The length of the
suspension depends on whether the writ or warrant relates to the
payment by the Fund of
(i) compensation for bodily injuries
(hereinafter referred to as “
the capital claims
”);
or (ii) interest on the capital claim (“
interest claims”
);
or (iii) legal costs (“
legal costs claims
”).
The length of the suspension in respect of capital claims is to be
determined by the age of the court order, (or
the settlement
agreement, whichever is applicable) determining the capital claim.
The defining date for the suspension of
writs and warrants for
interest would be the date the capital claim was paid. In the
case of writs and warrants for legal
costs, the length of the
suspension of the writs and warrants would be dictated by whether the
bill of costs was settled internally
with the Fund, or had to be
taxed, and when these events happened.
[2]
The
application was opposed by the respondents cited by the Fund
[1]
,
as well as parties who intervened as respondents. Some
respondents counter applied amongst others, for a structural
interdict.
Historical
context
[3]
On 24 April 2021, the Full Court, granted under case
number
58145/2020, a stay of writs and warrants against the Fund for a fixed
period of roughly twenty weeks, namely from 1 May
2021 until 12
September 2021 (“
the Full Court order
”).
[4]
The stay of execution related to writs and warrants against
the Fund
based on orders (“awards”) for the compensation payable
(“the capital”/ “capital claim”)
under the
Road Accident Fund Act, Act No 56 of 1996 (“
the RAF Act
”)
which were not older than 180 days reckoned from the date of the
court order. For convenience, I will henceforth
refer only to
court orders. I do not intend thereby to exclude settlement
agreements entered with the Fund in respect of
the payment of
capital. The moratorium from the Full Court protected the Fund
from execution to satisfy orders for the capital
claim.
(paragraph 45 (b) of the Full Court’s order).
[5]
As far as claims based on court orders older than 180
days reckoned
from the date of the court order, the Fund was ordered to pay these
claims by a fixed date. This, provided
that the claimant’s
attorney notified the Fund of the existence of such claims.
[6]
The Fund
had obtained a reprieve of roughly 20 weeks (or four-and-a-half
months (4½ months)) from the Full Court on the basis
that a
stay of execution was necessary to enable it to make payments within
its available resources. It applied for several
extensions
after the Full Court’s order lapsed in September 2021.
Seemingly, notwithstanding the benefit of the moratorium,
the Fund’s
operations and financial position did not stabilize. The Fund’s
new management appears not to have
succeeded in implementing the then
envisaged “far-reaching plans to restructure its payment
system” to enable it to
promptly discharge its statutory
obligation. The application for further extensions on their own
show that the Fund was not
able to discharge its statutory
obligation, notwithstanding the moratorium. Thus, impacting on
the State’s ability
to promptly discharge its constitutional
obligations to protect road users against the risk of the
infringement of their right
to freedom and security of their person.
[2]
[7]
Notably, writs and warrants in respect of legal cost
orders or
interest on the capital claim, were not covered by the Full Court’s
order.
[8]
The Fund failed to secure an extension of the moratorium
when the
Full Court’s order lapsed. On 12 September 2021 the
protection enjoyed by the Full Court order ended.
[9]
On 25 August 2022, Van Der Westhuizen J restored the
protection for
six months in respect of capital awards not older than 180 days as
from the date of the court order, or the date
of the settlement (“the
Van der Westhuizen J order”). In terms of paragraph 2,
attorneys representing claimants
whose matters had not been placed on
the Requested Not Yet Paid (“RNYP”) list, had to provide
to the Fund a list of
such claims by a fixed date. In terms of
paragraph 4 the Fund was obliged to pay, by a fixed date, claims
which were older
than 180 days reckoned from the date of the capital
award. This was subject to the claimant’s attorney having
notified
the Fund of the claim by no later than a fixed date.
The protection under the order by Van der Westhuizen J lapsed on 23
February 2023.
[10]
On 9 March
2023, Swanepoel J reinstated the order issued by Van der Westhuizen
J. All writs and warrants against the
Fund based on
capital awards were suspended until the order had aged 180 days
reckoned from the date of the order. The order
endured for six
months or until the application instituted under case number
58145/2020 was heard by the date arranged with the
Deputy Judge
President, whichever date was the earlier. The fixed dates
referred to in the order by Van der Westhuizen J
were adjusted.
The claimants’ attorneys were directed to send the
notifications contemplated in Swanepoel J’s
court order to the
Fund’s dedicated e-mail address, namely
4[...]
.
The Fund was ordered to pay all claims on the RNYP list older than
180 days, by a fixed date.
[11]
On 8 August 2023, the ambit of the moratorium was extended. The Fund
secured
a further six-month suspension of writs and warrants on
capital awards. It also secured a suspension of writs and
warrants
in respect of interest claims not older than 180 days
reckoned from the date when the capital claim was paid. Janse
van Nieuwenhuizen
J suspended such writs and warrants for 14 days.
The court order was operative for six-months, thus lapsing on 7
February
2024.
The
institution of the present application
[12]
This application was issued on 21 December 2023. I highlight
the primary
aspects of the relief for which the Fund applied.
[13]
In the notice of motion, the Fund sought a suspension on the
execution of (i)
capital and interest orders (“awards”);
and (ii) cost orders.
[14]
Execution
on capital awards had been suspended from time to time since at least
9 December 2020.
[3]
Execution on interest awards have been suspended since 8 August
2023.
[4]
[15]
The object of the present application is to secure an extension of
not only
the protection enjoyed under the orders issued by Janse van
Niewenhuizen J but to extend the ambit of the protection hitherto
enjoyed,
to include a moratorium on the execution of writs and
warrants for legal costs.
[16]
In all cases where the
Fund fails to place
matters on the RNYP list within 30 days of the notification from the
claimant’s attorney to do so, there
would be no impediment to
immediate execution (prayer 6).
Synopsis
of the primary relief in the notice of motion
[17]
The length of the suspension of execution which
the Fund seeks in the notice of motion varies depending on whether
execution is
to satisfy the capital award, interest thereon, or legal
costs.
Capital
claims
[18]
The age of the court order for the capital
claim would determine the commencement of the suspension on the
execution of capital
awards.
[19]
In respect of capital awards not older than 180
days reckoned from the date of a court order (or settlement), the
Fund applied for
execution to be suspended for 180 days (prayer 1).
[20]
The relief
claimed in prayer 7 of the notice of motion can be confusing.
[5]
Nevertheless, in respect of existing court orders for the payment of
capital which were older than 180 days, the Fund undertook
to pay the
capital within a fixed period subject to conditions concerning notice
of the claims by a claimant’s attorney.
Interest
claims
[21]
The lapse of time reckoned from the date of the
payment of the capital claim would determine the duration of the
suspension on the
execution of interest claims.
Legal
costs
[22]
In the case of legal costs, the date of the
costs order (or settlement of the dispute as to the Fund’s
liability for legal
costs) and whether the bill of costs was settled
with the Fund internally and when, or had to be taxed, would
determine the duration
of the suspension on the execution of legal
costs claims, and its commencement (prayer 4).
The
interim relief pending finalisation of this application
[23]
On 15 February 2024, Bam J extended the operation of the order issued
by Janse
van Nieuwenhuizen J pending the finalisation of this
application. On 23 May 2024, I extended the operation of the
order issued
by Bam J until the finalisation of this application.
The
unfolding of the presentation, and hearing, of this application
[24]
The application which was enrolled before me for three days was not
argued.
Nor were the counter applications.
[25]
The parties informed me on the first day of the sitting that they
wished to
explore the possibility of resolving or limiting the
disputes. I acceded to the request to stand the application
down to
later in the week. On the third day, I was informed
that the bulk of the disputes were resolved, however, there remained
issues which the parties could not agree on. The application
was called at 14h00. Some respondents raised points
in
limine
and thus resisted the application. By the end of
their arguments, there appears to have been a change of heart.
Nevertheless,
the Minister of Transport is not a necessary party and
the authority to institute the application has been established on
the papers.
The non-joinder point, and the charge that the
proceedings are not authorised, in my view are without merit. I
am not satisfied
that a dispute of fact arises on the papers. I
was presented with five (5) separate proposals styled “Draft
Order”
by the following parties-
(a)
The Fund (“
the RAF’s draft order
”).
(b)
Mafori Lesufi Incorporated, the fourteenth (14
th
)
respondent (“
the Mafori Lesufi draft order
”).
(c)
Professionals Unity of South Africa, the two hundred and eleventh
(211
th
) respondent (“
the PROFSA draft order
).
(d)
The Black Lawyers’ Association, the two hundred and fifteenth
(215
th
) respondent (“
the BLA draft order
”).
(e)
The tenth (10
th
) to the two hundred and tenth (210
th
)
respondent and the two hundred and twelfth (212
th
) to two
hundred and fourteenth (214
th
) respondent (“
the
Geach draft order
”).
[26]
The Fund moved for an order in terms of the draft order prepared by
it.
The terms of the draft order did not align with the terms
of the notice of motion. The devil was in the detail added to
the
relief claimed in the notice of motion. The resulting
differences between the relief claimed in the notice of motion and
the order moved for, were not insignificant.
[27]
While there were differences in the content of the five proposals,
there were
also commonalties. At the end of the day what each
of the five proposers effectively desired was for the court to pick
one
of the proposed draft orders to convert into a court order or
pick provisions from the proposals presented which should make their
way into a court order. There were no meaningful submissions
whether an order proposed was competent or why a particular
provision
in a proposal should be included in the order made in this
application or not.
[28]
I have reservations whether the application which on the face of it
is brought
under rule 45A of the Uniform Rules of Court, the common
law or section 172 of the Constitution of the Republic of South
Africa,
1996 (“the Constitution”), is in effect not
an application deferring or postponing the Fund’s liability
to
claimants for reasons which follow. However, because the
parties are agreed that writs and warrants in respect of capital
claims and interest claims should be suspended, this is not an issue
before me.
[29]
Apart, from the issue whether execution in respect of legal costs
should also
be suspended, the differences in the provisions in the
five draft orders are administrative or regulatory. Courts are
adjudicators
of disputes of fact and law. They are not
administrators. What the RAF seeks goes beyond the
regulation of the
court process. The holders of the remedy to
permanently heal or temporarily soothe or alleviate the Fund’s
malady is
the Legislature and the Minister in charge of the portfolio
for Transport.
[30]
The legislature has dictated the Fund’s rights and obligations,
and the
conditions under which they arise. At the same time, it
has dictated the rights and obligations of the beneficiaries of the
compensation payable by the Fund, and the conditions under which they
arise.
[31]
Regrettably, over at least the last 3-4 years, the Fund has not
respected the
rights and needs of claimants injured in motor vehicle
accidents due to the negligent driving of another. Lamentably,
the
Fund has breached its statutory obligation to compensate injured
claimants.
[32]
The Fund disregards the rules of court aimed at an orderly and speedy
resolution
of disputes. It also ignores court orders.
Consequently, whether intentionally or not, the Fund has obstructed
the
efficient operation of the courts, thus failing to discharge its
positive constitutional obligation under section 165(4) of the
Constitution “to assist …courts to ensure the dignity,
accessibility and effectiveness of the courts”.
[33]
Undesirably, countless hours of judicial time, and resources are
wasted because
the Fund does not properly defend actions. In
most cases, the Fund does not produce expert reports and is not
represented
at the trial. The adjudicative task is however not
made lighter when the Fund is in default, it is heavier. The
court
must still ensure that a plaintiff is neither over-compensated
nor under-compensated. But, without the benefit of submissions
from the defendant why the compensation sought is not fair and
reasonable, invariably the court must critically, and more closely,
scrutinise the opinion evidence than would otherwise be necessary.
At the same time, the court must remain mindful that it
is an
adjudicator, not an adversary. This unwittingly leads to the
inefficient use of already strained judicial resources.
Unfortunately. even in those isolated cases where the Fund is
represented at the trial, the Fund cannot challenge the correctness
of the facts informing the opinion of an expert consulted by the
plaintiff, let alone the opinion. Often, through no fault
of
the legal practitioner, the legal practitioner is hamstrung making
meaningful submissions. Not only participation, but
meaningful
participation, by the Fund will contribute and alleviate the burden
which the courts bear.
[34]
The Fund’s attitude to actions has clogged court rolls to the
prejudice
of other litigants. Albeit perhaps unconsciously, the
Fund’s conduct is inconsistent with section 162(4) and section
164(3) of the Constitution.
[35]
Through
appealing to the court’s discretion under rule 45A to suspend
the execution of any order, or its inherent power to
regulate its
procedures conferred by the common law and section 173 of the
Constitution, the Fund has achieved a postponement or
deferment of
its statutory obligation to compensate the beneficiaries of the
social security scheme created by the RAF Act.
The reprieve
which the Full Court granted to the Fund was intended to be a
temporary suspension of execution.
[6]
However, what the Fund has achieved, and wants to perpetuate, is a
postponement or deferral of its liability to compensate
a claimant.
In my view, that must be sanctioned by the legislature because the
obligation to pay compensation and the conditions
under which this
must happen have been proclaimed by the legislature. If the
Fund wants a deferral or the postponement of
its obligation to pay
compensation to claimants who meet the conditions for compensation,
it must obtain the legislature’s
sanction.
[36]
While the court has the inherent common law power and the
constitutional authority
to regulate its process, it does not have
the power to regulate how an entity such as the Fund must administer
its affairs and
what it should do to discharge its statutory mandate,
and obligations. It does not lie in the purview of the courts
to administer
the Fund and manage its operations or direct the
minutiae of how it should carry out its functions. The Fund has
invoked
the court process as an instrument to regulate, administer
and manage its operations. In this way the Fund seeks to impose
rules that suit it, when it suits it. The rules are fluid and
for its benefit alone.
[37]
If it is necessary or expedient for the achievement or promotion of
the object
of the RAF Act to impose conditions such as notification
of court orders, the manner thereof, and the provision of documents
to
facilitate efficient and prompt payment of claims, as the Fund
seeks to do in this application, in my view the remedy lies in
section
26 of the RAF Act. The Minister is empowered thereby to make
regulations regarding any matter which it is expedient or necessary
to prescribe to achieve or promote the object of the RAF Act.
The
issues
[38]
By the time
that the application was recalled before me on the third day, the
parties were agreed that writs and warrants in respect
of capital
claims
[7]
as well as
awards for interest on the capital claims should be suspended for 180
days. The parties differ on when the period
of suspension
should commence.
[39]
They are not in agreement that writs and warrants for legal costs
payable by
the Fund should be suspended. Nor, that this order
should operate for more than 6 months.
[40]
The 15
th
to 201
st
, and 208
th
and
209
th
, respondents had conditionally counter applied for a
structural interdict. They did not persist with this at the
hearing
and aligned themselves with the Geach order.
[41]
The 14
th
respondent, Mafori Lesufi Incorporated,
counter-applied for an order compelling the Fund (i) to pay to it in
respect of matters
which were settled with the Fund or finalised, all
amounts due and owing for more than 180 days of which the Fund had
been duly
informed; and (ii) to load all settled and/or finalised
matters submitted by it within 5 calendar days. It did not
persist
with this relief.
[42]
However, and even though the 14
th
respondent, as well as
the 211
th
respondent, PROFSA, and the 215
th
Respondent, the BLA, did not counter apply for a structural
interdict, their draft orders contain a structural interdict.
Not only is there no counter application for a structural interdict
before me by these respondents. I was also not addressed
on the
merits of a structural interdict. Accordingly, I am not
prepared to grant the orders proposed by the 14
th
respondent in paragraph 15 and 16.1 and 16.3 of its draft order, nor
for payment in terms of paragraph 16.2, which is linked to
sub-paragraph 16.1 and 16.3. For the same reason, I am not
inclined to grant the structural interdict contained in paragraph
4
and 11 of the draft order proposed by the 211
th
respondent
and the 215
th
respondent respectively in their separate
draft orders (which are identical in all respects).
[43]
In view of the agreement on the suspension of writs and warrants to
satisfy
capital claims as well as interest claims, I do not have to
decide whether a case has been made out for the suspension of such
writs and warrants. The issues which the parties are not able
to agree on and which I must therefore decide are:
(a)
When the 180-day suspension in respect of writs and warrants in
respect of capital claims
should commence.
(b)
From what date should execution be suspended for interest claims
which are not older than
90 days reckoned from the date the capital
claim was paid.
(c)
Whether writs and warrants for legal costs should be suspended, and
if so, from what
date and for how long.
(d)
Whether the commencement of the suspension should be postponed in
certain circumstances.
(e)
Whether the order I make should operate for 6 months or 12 months.
The
commencement date of the 180-day suspension in respect of writs of
execution and warrants of attachment in respect of orders
for capital
which have not aged 180 days
[44]
In its
notice of motion, the Fund sought in respect of writs of execution
and warrants of attachment based on capital claims a reprieve
of 180
(one hundred and eighty) calendar days (6 months) from the date of
the court order or the date of the settlement of the
capital
claim.
[8]
[45]
However, in its draft order it, moves for the following —
“
All writs of
execution and warrants of attachment against the Road Accident Fund
(“the RAF”) in respect of capital based
on court orders
already granted or settlements already reached in terms of the Road
Accident Fund Act, 1996 (‘the RAF Act”),
as amended,
which are not older than 180 calendar days as from the date
when
the RAF is alerted
to the court order or settlement in question
by
the sending of an e-mail including a stamped court order to
4[...]
,
are hereby suspended for a period of 180 calendar days
from
the date that the RAF is alerted to the order or settlement as set
out above
.”
[I have underlined the
text to highlight the differences]
[46]
The differences are not insignificant; the judgment creditor’s
right
to execute its judgment is not only suspended it is postponed.
Firstly, the date on which the suspension commences is determined
by
the date on which the Fund is “alerted to the court order or
settlement” in the manner and form required by the
Fund.
Secondly, flowing from the first, alerting the Fund to the court
order or settlement agreement in the manner and in
the form required
by the Fund is a pre-requisite to execution. Execution will
thus be postponed until the Fund is alerted
as required by it, and
execution will be suspended from that date for a period of 180 days.
[47]
I infer from the Fund’s shift from what was claimed in the
notice of
motion to what is claimed in the draft order, namely
imposing an obligation on the claimants’ attorneys to “alert”
the Fund to the court order, was deliberate. But the Fund does not
explain why it has shifted the commencement date of the suspension
from the date of the court order to when the Fund is “alerted”
to the court order or settlement. It also does
not explain why
claimants must be ordered to provide to it a stamped court order as a
condition to execution of the order.
[48]
The consequence of the obligation which the Fund seeks to impose on
claimants
is that unless the Fund is alerted as required by the Fund
the commencement of the aging of the court order and the commencement
of the period for which writs and warrants are to be suspended will
be postponed until the Fund is so alerted.
[49]
Save for the 211
th
and the 215
th
respondent,
the other respondents oppose the imposition of an obligation (i) to
“alert” the Fund to the court order,
or settlement; and
(ii) to send a stamped copy of the court order to the Fund.
These respondents propose in their draft order
—
“
All writs of
execution and warrants of attachment against the [Fund] in respect of
capital based on court orders already granted
or settlements already
reached in terms of the
Road Accident Fund Act&hellip
;, which are not
older than 180 calendar days as from the date when the RAF is
informed thereof by the sending of an e-mail to
4[...]
,
are hereby suspended for a period of 180 calendar days from the date
that the e-mail is sent to the RAF.”
[50]
The Fund is
not content with being “informed” of the existence of a
court order, it wants to be warned (in its words,
“alerted to”)
something perilous to it.
[9]
The aim of a warning is to enable the person warned to avert danger.
As I see it, unless the warning comes to the attention
of that person
it cannot act to avert the danger. Hidden between the lines,
the Fund seeks to impose upon the claimant an
obligation to ensure
that the court order comes to someone’s attention. The
obligation to “alert” the Fund
to a court order or a
settlement imposes a duty on the claimant’s attorney to ensure
that the Fund is aware of the court
order, or that the order is
brought to its attention.
[51]
I am not inclined to oblige claimants to “alert” the Fund
to the
existence of a court order. In my view, this carries more than
the obligation to inform or notify the Fund of the existence of the
court order. The obligation to “alert” the Fund to
the court order or settlement, is unduly onerous. Instead
of
accomplishing a moratorium, the Fund would achieve a restraint on
execution unless the claimant can prove that the court order
came to
the attention of the Fund. It is inimical to the interests of
justice for the beneficiaries of social security to
be restrained in
this way.
[52]
None of the respondents, object to informing the Fund of the court
order, or
settlement agreement, by sending it by e-mail to the Fund’s
dedicated e-mail address. The claimants’ attorneys
are
prepared to assume the obligation to inform the Fund by e-mail of
court orders granted or settlements reached. Therefore,
I can
find no reason, and none was advanced, why the claimants’
attorneys should not simultaneously with the e-mail send
a copy of
the stamped court order, and a copy of the settlement agreement, if
applicable.
[53]
I am not inclined to impose upon a claimant anything more than
the obligation
to (i) inform the Fund of the court order; (ii) send a
copy of the stamped court order, and a copy of the settlement
agreement
if applicable, to it. I find no compelling reason,
and none was advanced, to postpone the commencement of the aging of a
court order or the suspension period for writs of execution and
warrants of attachment for capital claims beyond the date on which
the Fund is informed of the court order by the sending of an e-mail
accompanied by a copy of a stamped court order to the
Fund’s
dedicated e-mail address.
[54]
I therefore
intend making an order that all writs and warrants against the Fund
in respect of capital based on orders already granted
or settlements
already reached, which are not older than 180 calendar days as from
the date when the Fund is informed thereof by
the sending of an
e-mail to
4[...]
together
with a copy of the stamped court order, and a copy of the settlement
agreement where applicable, are suspended for a period
of 180
calendar days from the date when the court order is sent to the
Fund’s dedicated e-mail address, together with where
applicable, a copy of the settlement agreement. An e-mail
delivery report shall constitute rebuttable proof of delivery and
hence rebuttable proof that the obligation to inform the Fund has
been discharged. In the event of the dedicated e-mail address
not accepting e-mails on three consecutive calendar days, delivery by
hand to the RAF’s head office will discharge the claimant’s
attorney’s obligation to inform the Fund.
The
suspension of writs and warrants in respect of interest claims
[55]
Janse van Nieuwenhuizen J suspended for 14 calendar days all writs
and warrants
based on claims for interest on amounts already paid to
claimants which were not older than 180 days from the date of the
payment
of the capital amount. The order sought in the notice
of motion mirrors this order. However, this is not what the
Fund
moves for in its proposed order. It seeks the postponement
of the commencement of the suspension period unless, and until,
the
claimant’s attorney has notified the Fund of the interest claim
and has additionally shown to the Fund the number of
days for which
interest has been applied, and the gazetted interest rate applied.
I do not know the legal basis for imposing
these conditions. It
seems, the Fund wants to achieve relief from clerical and mundane
administrative burdens. I know
of no law which allows it to
divest itself of such burdens and transfer and impose them on
others.
[56]
I find no compelling reason, and none was advanced, to postpone the
commencement
of the suspension period for writs and warrants for
interest claims on the conditions which the Fund seeks to impose.
Once
the period for the payment of the capital claim has passed,
interest accrues, unless the law or a court order provides
otherwise.
The Fund can determine with reference to the court
order whether the capital was paid timeously, and if not, when it was
paid and
the permissible rate of interest leviable at the relevant
time or times under the Prescribed Rate of Interest Act, Act No 55 of
1975. Imposing additional burdens on the claimants’
attorneys would escalate legal costs and deplete the compensation
awarded to claimants. Postponing the commencement of the
suspension period is not in the best interest of claimants for whose
benefit the Fund exists. I cannot find any basis to alter the
order by Janse van Nieuwenhuizen J for the suspension of writs
and
warrants in respect of interest claims.
The
suspension of writs and warrants in respect of legal costs
[57]
The Fund applied before Janse van Nieuwenhuizen J for a suspension on
the execution
of legal costs for 6 months after a bill of costs was
taxed by the Taxing Master. The order was refused because it
was found
unreasonable for parties to wait a further 6 months for the
payment of legal costs when they had already waited 18 months for the
bill to be taxed before the Taxing Master. In the present
application, in respect of legal costs, the Fund seeks a suspension
of writs and warrants for a period ranging between 45 to 180 days.
[58]
The respondents oppose the suspension of such writs and warrants
outright.
The Fund contends that the opposition is
unreasonable. I do not agree. To the contrary, I agree
with Janse van Nieuwenhuizen
J that it is unreasonable that in
addition to a plaintiff having to wait for a date for the bill of
costs to be taxed before the
Taxing Master, it must wait a further
six months before it can enforce a costs order granted months, and
more likely years, ago.
However, the reality is that the
survival of the Fund is dependent on a moratorium on execution.
Inherent in the respondents’
agreement to a further
suspension of writs and warrants in respect of capital and interest,
is the acknowledgement that a suspension
of execution while
unpalatable, is necessary to avert a collapse of the Fund.
[59]
If the Fund is forced to pay legal costs under the compulsion of the
attachment
of assets and execution to satisfy these claims, or if it
incurs legal costs to obtain an order to suspend attachments and
execution,
the positive effects of the suspension on execution of
writs and warrants in respect of capital claims and interest, will be
diluted,
if not undone albeit partially. As I see it, the very
object of the moratorium which has been in place since November 2020
will be defeated. It is in the interests of justice, that writs
and warrants in respect of legal costs should be suspended.
However, the length of the suspension which the Fund seeks is not
reasonable. The Fund must be incentivised to settle bills
of
costs, and pay the legal costs, with expedition. For this
reason, I intend ordering a suspension of writs and warrants
in
respect of legal costs as follows:
(a)
Writs of execution and warrants of attachment in respect of
bills of
costs settled with the RAF’s internal costs department —
(i)
within 30 calendar days from the service of the
bill of costs by
e-mail to an address dedicated for this purpose (“the dedicated
legal costs e-mail”) or
(ii)
within 30 calendar days from the re-service, by e-mail
to the
dedicated legal costs e-mail, of bills of costs previously served on
the Fund, but not taxed or settled at the date of this
order
shall be suspended for 6
weeks from the date of the settlement of the bill of costs.
(b)
Writs of execution and warrants of attachment in respect of
bills of
costs which have been taxed at the date of this order shall be
suspended for 6 weeks from the date of this order.
Length
of operation of the order
[60]
The notice
of motion is silent on the length of time for which the order will be
effective. In terms of the Fund’s draft
order, the order
should endure for 12 months from the date of this order. There
are no facts to motivate why this is necessary.
Mr Geach SC and
other respondents submitted that 12 months was arbitrary. It
was submitted that the life of the order should
be limited to 6
months.
[10]
In the
absence of a motivated case why the Fund requires breathing space for
12 months, and how that will stabilise the Fund
to pay judgment debts
when they fall due, I am not prepared to allow the Fund a further 12
months. The majority of the respondents
are agreed that the
order in this application may endure for 6 months. I have
considered making an order with a shorter life
considering the
benefit of the length of the moratorium since this application was
heard. I have however decided against
it. In my view, the
Fund should reflect on and explore whether a legislative path is open
to address its challenges, or whether
its challenges can be managed
through Regulations under section 26 of the RAF Act. I intend
allowing them six months from
the date of this order to do so.
Costs
[61]
The Fund cited the Legal Practice Council, the Board of Sheriffs,
Sheriffs
in various areas, the Pretoria Association of Attorneys and
the Johannesburg Attorneys’ Association. Of these, the
Pretoria Association of Attorneys (“PAA”) and the
Johannesburg Attorneys’ Association (“JAA”) opposed
the application. The Fund seeks an indulgence and brings these
parties to court. They were entitled to oppose the application,
and their contribution has benefited claimants and their attorneys.
The Fund should pay the costs of these two respondents.
In view
of the nature, and implications of the relief which the Fund seeks,
the employment of a senior counsel and one junior counsel
was
warranted. In the circumstances, it is just and equitable, that the
Fund pays the costs of the application together with the
costs of two
counsel, where so employed. Hence the Fund must pay the costs
of senior counsel and one junior counsel, the
latter’s costs
taxable on scale C. In the case of the lead counsel not being a
senior counsel, the Fund must pay the
costs of two junior counsel on
scale C.
[62]
Concerning the costs of the remaining respondents, their
contributions were
not essential for the adjudication of the
application. At best, they supported the JAA and PAA’s
opposition.
In view of the Fund’s parlous financial
circumstances, I do not consider it to be in the interests of justice
nor in the
interest of present and future beneficiaries of the social
security scheme established under the RAF Act to burden the Fund with
further costs. In the circumstances the remaining respondents
shall pay their own costs.
The
remaining orders sought
[63]
Other orders which the parties request, are not contentious.
They are
included in the order.
The
order
[64]
The parties may approach the court by 26 February 2025, for any
agreed amendments
or the correction of omissions or patent errors, if
any, in the order below.
In
the result I make the following order:
[65]
All writs of execution and warrants of attachment against the Road
Accident
Fund (“the RAF”) in respect of capital, based on
court orders already granted, or settlements already reached, in
terms
of the Road Accident Fund Act, 1996 (“the RAF Act”),
as amended, which are not older than 180 calendar days as from
the
date when the RAF is informed thereof by sending an email to 4[...],
accompanied by a copy of the stamped court order, together
with where
applicable, a copy of the settlement agreement, are hereby suspended
for a period of 180 calendar days from the date
when the email is
sent to the RAF.
[66]
All writs of execution and warrants of attachment against the RAF
based on
claims for interest on capital amounts already paid to
claimants, which are not older than 180 calendar days from the date
of the
payment of the capital amount, are suspended for a period of
14 calendar days.
[67]
Writs of execution and warrants of attachment against the RAF based
on orders
already granted, or settlements already reached, in respect
of legal costs for a plaintiff in third-party compensation claims
against
the RAF, are suspended only in the following instances -
(a)
Writs of execution and warrants of attachment for legal costs
in the
case of bills of costs settled with the RAF’s internal costs
department-
(i)
within 30 calendar days from the date when the
bill of costs is sent
by e-mail to an address identified by the RAF and dedicated for this
purpose (“the dedicated legal
costs e-mail”); or
(ii)
within 30 calendar days from re-sending to the dedicated
legal costs
e-mail address, bills of costs previously sent to the Fund which have
not been taxed or settled at the date of this
order
are
hereby suspended for 6 weeks from the date of the settlement of the
bill of
costs.
(b)
Writs of execution and warrants of attachment in respect of
bills of
costs which have been taxed at the date of this order shall be
suspended for 6 weeks from the date of this order in the
case where
the Fund was represented at the taxation and in cases where the Fund
was not represented at the taxation, the suspension
shall operate for
6 weeks from the date when the claimant’s attorney sends the
bill of costs embodying the allocatur signed
by the Taxing Master to
the dedicated legal costs e-mail address.
[68]
All
attorneys who represent a claimant and whose matters (inclusive of
capital, cost and interest) have not been placed on the RNYP
list at
the date of this order, are to provide to the RAF by sending an
e-mail to
4[...]
within 10
calendar days from the date of this order a list of those matters
which do not appear on the RNYP list.
[69]
The RAF
must place on the RNYP list all matters which a claimant’s
attorney has identified on its list to the RAF referred
to in
paragraph 68 above as not appearing on the RNYP list, and it must do
so within 30 calendar days of the date on which the
e-mail listing
such matters is sent by the claimant’s attorney to
4[...]
.
[70]
If the RAF
fails to place such matters on the RNYP list, such settlement or
orders may be executed upon on the 180
th
calendar day following the date of the order or settlement.
This paragraph of the order shall not deprive the RAF of the
right to
contest the order in terms of any law.
[11]
[71]
The RAF
must pay by 30 April 2025 all personal claims (inclusive of capital,
costs and interest) based on court orders already granted
in terms of
the RAF Act or settlements reached, which are at the date of this
order older than 180 calendar days from the date
that the RAF was
informed thereof by email to
4[...]
provided:
(a)
they
appear, and are marked “older than 180 calendar days on 21
February 2025”, on the list contemplated in paragraph
68 above
of matters which do not appear on the RNYP list which the claimant’s
attorney must in terms thereof provide to the
RAF by e-mail to
4[...]
within 10 calendar days from the date of this order; and
(b)
the claimant’s attorney has provided to the RAF the
documentation in annexure “X”, referred to in paragraph
73 below, to process payment.
[72]
Paragraph
71 above shall not deprive the RAF of the right in terms of any law
to contest the order referred to therein.
[12]
[73]
The RAF must by 26 February 2025 provide to the court a document
listing the
documentation necessary for it to process payment, which
list shall form annexure “X” to this judgment and form
part
of this court’s order.
[74]
An e-mail delivery report shall constitute rebuttable proof of
delivery to
the dedicated e-mail addresses referred to in this order,
and the claimants’ attorneys’ obligations under this
order
to send e-mails to the dedicated e-mail addresses shall be
deemed to have been discharged.
In the
event of the dedicated e-mail addresses referred to in this order not
accepting e-mails on three consecutive calendar days,
delivery by
hand to the RAF’s head office will discharge the claimant’s
attorney’s obligation under this order
to inform or notify the
RAF.
[75]
The RAF must continue distributing the RNYP list bi- monthly to the
attorneys
on its database. Any attorney who does not receive
its RNYP list must immediately contact the branch where its claims
are
administered to confirm the correctness of the email address
registered on the RAF’s system.
[76]
The RAF must continue its process of paying the oldest claims
(capital, costs
and interest) first by date of court order or date of
the written settlement agreement or date of taxation or date on which
interest
was claimed for the first time
a priori tempore
.
[77]
This order
does not constitute a compromise on any claim which may be in dispute
between the RAF and any of the respondents and/or
claimants.
[13]
[78]
The
parties’ rights in respect of ongoing disputes and/or
litigation not concerning a writ of execution or warrant of
attachment
are reserved and this order does not dispose of, nor
suspend, such disputes or litigation.
[14]
[79]
Supplier claims, as defined in the RAF Act, are excluded from the
moratorium
in this order on payments.
[80]
This order takes effect immediately and, will be effective for 6
months from
the date of this order.
[81]
This order shall be published by the RAF as follows:
(a)
Through the Legal Practice Council to all practising attorneys.
(b)
Service by the Sheriff on the Minister of Transport, at the official
address of the
Ministry of Transport and at the office of the State
Attorney, Pretoria.
(c)
Circulating it by e-mail to all attorneys listed on its database.
(d)
Publication in two major national newspapers.
[82]
The RAF shall pay the Pretoria Association of Attorneys’ taxed
costs
as well as the taxed costs of the Johannesburg Attorneys’
Association, including the costs of a senior counsel and one junior
counsel where so employed with the junior counsel’s costs
taxable on scale C. In the case of the lead counsel not being
a
senior counsel, the Fund shall pay the costs of two junior counsel on
scale C.
(c)
The remaining respondents shall pay their own costs.
S
K HASSIM J
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to
the
parties’ legal representatives by e-mail and by uploading it to
the electronic file on CaseLines. 21 February 2025
is deemed to
be date on which the judgment is handed down.
Date of
Hearing:
23 May 2024
Date of
Judgment:
21 February 2025
For the Applicant:
Adv
CE Puckrin SC
Adv
R Schoeman
Adv
P Nyapholi-Motsie
For the 10
th
Respondent:
Adv
BP Geach SC
Adv
JC van Eeden
For the 11
th
Respondent:
Adv
Salim Ebrahim
For
the 12
th
Respondent:
Adv
G J Strydom SC
For
the 13
th
Respondent:
Adv
E Ferreira SC
Adv
JRF Ernst
For
the 14
th
Respondent:
Adv
SG van der Walt
For
the 15
th
to 201
st
Respondents:
Adv
BP Geach SC
Adv
G Jansen
For
the
202
nd
to 207
th
Respondents:
Adv
M Snyman SC
For
the
208
th
to 209
th
Respondent:
Adv
FHH Kehrhahn
Adv
R Hawman
For
the 210
th
Respondent:
Adv
DeWet Keet
Adv
L Van Dyk
For
the 211
th
Respondent:
Adv
K Maponya
Adv
JMT Tlokana
For
the 212
th
Respondent:
Adv
A van der Westhuizen
Mr
JJ Bouwer
For
the 213
th
Respondent:
Adv
Pieter van der Schyff
Adv
D Hinrichsen
For
the 214
th
Respondent:
For
the 215
th
Respondent:
Mr.
J. Lazarus.
Adv
MR Maphutha
Adv
DM Mphahlele
[1]
Being the
first to eleventh respondent.
[2]
Cf. paragraph
29 of the Full Court’s judgment.
[3]
The order
issued by Lamont J on 9 December 2020.
[4]
In terms of
the order issued by Janse van Nieuwenhuizen J.
[5]
It reads:
“
That the RAF is
ordered to pay all personal capital compensation claims based on
court orders already granted in terms of the
RAF Act, 1996, which
are older than 180 days from the date that the RAF was informed
thereof by email to 45A-order@raf.co.za
within 30 days from the date
set out in paragraph 6, provided that the RAF has been properly
notified by an attorney who represents
the claimant that such claims
that are older than 180 days of the existence of such claims within
30 days from the date of this
order by email to [sic] as set out in
paragraph
5
6…”
Prayer 5 reads:
“
That all
attorneys who represent a claimant and whose matters have not been
placed on the RNYP list, are to provide the RAF with
a list of
matters which do not appear on the RNYP list by email to
45A-order@raf.co.za within 30 Court days from the date of
this
order.”
Prayer 6 reads:
"That the RAF is
ordered to place all matters referred to in paragraph 5 above on the
RNYP list within 30 court days from
the date mentioned in paragraph
5 and should the RAF failed to load such matters on the RNYP list,
then the matter may be executed,
notwithstanding the age of the
judgment…."
[6]
Para 35 of
the Full Court’s judgment.
[7]
Payable
by the Fund under a court order or a settlement agreement
between the claimant/plaintiff and the Fund.
[8]
Paragraph 2
of the notice of motion reads:
“
That all writs of
execution and warrants of attachment against the Road Accident Fund
("the RAF") based on court orders
already granted or
settlements already reached in terms of the Road Accident Fund Act,
1996 ("the RAF Act"), as amended,
which are not older than
180 calendar days as from the date of the court order or settlement
question, are hereby suspended for
a period of 180 days [sic]
calendar days from the date of the order or settlement in question."
[9]
Cf meaning of
“alert” as a verb in the Oxford Essential Dictionary,
Oxford University Press (2011).
[10]
The 14
th
and 215
th
respondent are in agreement. The 211
th
respondent proposed 3 months
[11]
The RAF reserves this right with the
respondents’ blessing.
[12]
The RAF reserves this right with the
respondents’ blessing.
[13]
This is proposed in
the Geach order but not the RAF order. This order
is made out
of an abundance of caution to avert disputes as to the ambit of the
orders issued.
[14]
This is also proposed in the Geach
order but not the RAF order. Again, this order is made
out of
an abundance of caution to avert disputes as to the ambit of the
orders issued.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Road Accident Fund v Labuschagne (48804/2017) [2025] ZAGPPHC 639 (17 June 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 639High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
Road Accident Fund v Schuurmann Van Den Heever & Slabbert Inc and Others (Appeal) (A300/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 530 (28 May 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 530High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
Road Accident Fund v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service and Another (019721/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 336 (26 March 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 336High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
Road Accident Fund v Onica (1115/2019) [2025] ZAGPPHC 470 (5 February 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 470High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
Road Accident Fund v Mphahlele obo Magadla and Another (45484/2021) [2025] ZAGPPHC 953 (4 September 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 953High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar